iron
Yes, iron has a Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) which varies by age, gender, and life stage. The RDA for iron is higher in women of childbearing age compared to men and postmenopausal women to account for menstrual losses. The RDA for iron is around 8-18 mg per day for adults.
75 mg is the rda for women and 90 for men however children, smokers, breastfeeding women, and pregnant women need more.
On average, men are stronger and taller than women. This simple fact is entirely sufficient to explain why men can jump higher than women on average.
Women had fewer job opportunities than men did. (right on-Apx-)
Women tend to have a higher fat: - muscle ration than men do, and fat is also more buoyant than muscle.
The pay level of men in still higher than women but women are quickly catching up women earn about 75% of what men earn
Women had fewer job opportunities than men did in the 1960s.
growth hormone
they hated women working because men liked to think they were higher up than the womanx
Yes
Actually men have more natural upper body strength and a higher range of heights than women do. With greater size also come greater strength and men are generally bigger.Women are strong in different ways. Women have to go though periods and have babies which takes strength.
no, women and men should be treated equally, just like during the Renaissance, with the Magna Carta.